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Elizabeth Eckford sits at home with her schoolbooks after being turned away from Central High by National Guardsmen on September 4, 1957. © Bettmann/Corbis.

The essence of education
The little rock nine

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The Little Rock Nine pictured with Daisy Bates, the president of the Arkansas NAACP.

As we continue to battle with funding for education, the lack of importance for learning and the illiteracy rate souring in our communities, we should step back in time and remember when the battle was focused on uniting our youth in a common America and creating a higher level of education for everyone!

The Little Rock Nine, as they later came to be called, were the first black teenagers to attend all-white Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas, in 1957. These remarkable young African-American students challenged segregation in the deep South and won.

Although Brown v. Board of Education outlawed segregation in schools, many racist school systems defied the law by intimidating and threatening black students—Central High School was a notorious example. But the Little Rock Nine were determined to attend the school and receive the same education offered to white students, no matter what. Things grew ugly and frightening right away. On the first day of school, the governor of Arkansas ordered the state's National Guard to block the black students from entering the school. Imagine what it must have been like to be a student confronted by armed soldiers! President Eisenhower had to send in federal troops to protect the students.

But that was only the beginning of their ordeal. Every morning on their way to school angry crowds of whites taunted and insulted the Little Rock Nine—they even received death threats. One of the students, fifteen-year-old Elizabeth Eckford, said "I tried to see a friendly face somewhere in the mob. . . . I looked into the face of an old woman, and it seemed a kind face, but when I looked at her again, she spat at me." As scared as they were, the students wouldn't give up, and several went on to graduate from Central High. Nine black teenagers challenged a racist system and defeated it.

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These young people knew the importance of higher learning and risked their lives and everything they had for a better future for themselves and the future of anyone that wanted the same learning experience as their proverbial racial counterparts.
 
Let's us now move forward in time and examine our progress, have we been effective in adding to greatness, or have we allowed ourselves to be defeated in spite of the efforts of those brave young students?

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THE NINE WHO DARED TO DEFY SEGREGATIONISTS TRADITIONS RECEIVE THIS COUNTRY'S HIGHEST AWARD-IN THE EAST ROOM OF THE WHITE HOUSE, NOVEMBER 9, 1999 

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Little Rock Nine Civil Rights Memorial-State Capital AK

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